Update: If June 1 turns out to presage June 57, er June 30, Obama should just resign right now.
Consider, Obama now below 50% against Romney — in California. Is this the well deserved collapse???? Is Paris Burning?
Consider, Bill Clinton did not just stick the knife into Obama’s campaign on CNN. Bill Clinton is also going against Obama’s choice in a New Jersey congressional race. Can you guess why Bill is endorsing lately?
I would pay money to see Bill bury the bastard.
I think it's hilarious just how much Barack needs Bill to even stand a chance at re-election.
All Barack could do in 2008 was lie and whisper "racist!"
Now he needs Bill.
Barack needs to go.
I don't think Hillary will run in 2016.
I'm not saying "Barack needs to go" because I'm trying to clear the way for Hillary. (I supported Hillary in 2008. When the nomination was stolen from her, I put my support behind Ralph Nader.)
I believe her when she says that she's got a life to live. And I wish her all the best in that.
I will never, ever get over what was done to the first woman who could have been president, the first serious contender. Not to mention the fact that she got more votes than Barack in the Democratic primaries.
I will never forget it.
I will never forget the cheap trash that went after Hillary.
And I won't trust them.
I'm glad Barack got his historical footnote. It's a real shame it came at the expense of America. If you missed it, unemployment's risen to 8.2%.
I'm supporting Jill Stein but, come November, if it looks close, I might just vote for Mitt Romney to get Barack out of here. That's how sick I am of that idiot.
ADDING ON SATURDAY Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "The Jobs Report" which just went up.
"Iraq snapshot" (The Common Ills):
Friday,
 June 1, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, the political crisis 
continues, Nouri stands with two buddies, Iraqi women continue to 
suffer, a court gives the US State Dept four months to comply with an 
order, and more.
Like a nightmare version of Charlie's Angels, Ammar al-Hakim, Ibrahim al-Jaafari and Nouri al-Maliki stood side by side to announce their solidarity.  Alsumaria reports
 that the head of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq, the head of the 
National Alliance and the Prime minister of Iraq met to discuss the 
latest political developments in Iraq and how to address them.  Al 
Rafidayn has an article where Ammar's dropping terms like "sin" and "big
 sin" and talking about "the street" and it all sounds like a lover in 
the grip of passion.
So let flow the hydrants
And we'll dance in the spray
And we'll wash out all our dirty laundry 
In the alleyway
Put your love out in the street
Put your love out in the street
Put your love out in the street
Put your love
Out in the street tonight
-- "Love Out In The Street," written by Carly Simon, first appears on her Playing Possum
While Ammar de amour works himself into a frenzy, Kitabat reports that Moqtada al-Sadr's followers have rejected the notion that chaos follows a no-confidence vote in Nouri.
KENYON:
 On paper it looks like a serious threat to Maliki's rule. But if you 
ask the prime minister's supporters about a no confidence motion, they 
tend to laugh and say bring it on.
SAAD
 MUTTALIBI: Oh, definitely. Just go ahead. You know, we will sit there 
and laugh at the puny numbers that you will gain in the parliament.
KENYON:
 Businessman and Maliki backer Saad Muttalibi says those who have 
actually tried to add up the votes say the opposition is well short at 
the moment. He says pro-Maliki forces are mounting a counterattack, 
collecting votes for a no confidence motion against the anti-Maliki 
speaker of the parliament. And Muttalibi says Sadr is jeopardizing his 
future in the governing National Alliance by cozying up to the Kurds and
 Sunnis.
It's great that NPR had time for bitchy but exactly when did they intend to explain the political crisis to listeners?
They are aware that they never did that, right?
That
 never once in the report did they mention the Erbil Agreement or the 
2010 elections or anything of real substance.  But, hey, we got a bitchy
 supporter of Nouri's and didn't that make everything worthwhile?
Earlier this year,   Marina Ottaway and Danial Kaysi's [PDF format warning] "The State Of Iraq"  (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace) reviewed events and noted:
Within
 days of the official ceremonies marking the end of the U.S. mission in 
Iraq, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki moved to indict Vice President 
Tariq al-Hashemi on terrorism charges and sought to remove Deputy Prime 
Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq from his position, triggering a major political
 crisis that fully revealed Iraq as an unstable, undemocractic country 
governed by raw competition for power and barely affected by 
institutional arrangements.  Large-scale violence immediately flared up 
again, with a series of terrorist attacks against mostly Shi'i targets 
reminiscent of the worst days of 2006.
But there is 
more to the crisis than an escalation of violence.  The tenuous 
political agreement among parties and factions reached at the end of 
2010 has collapsed.  The government of national unity has stopped 
functioning, and provinces that want to become regions with autonomous 
power comparable to Kurdistan's are putting increasing pressure on the 
central government.  Unless a new political agreement is reached soon, 
Iraq may plunge into civil war or split apart. 
The agreement was the Erbil Agreement. March 7, 2010, Iraq held parliamentary elections. Ayad Allawi's Iraqiya came in first ahead of Nouri's State of Law. Nouri refused to give up the post of prime minister. What followed were eight months of political stalemate. The White House and the Iranian government were backing Nouri so he knew he could dig in his heels and did just that. Finally, in November, the US-brokered Erbil Agreement was reached. Nouri could have a second term as prime minister provided he made concessions on other issues.
Nouri used the agreement to get his second term and then trashed the agreement refusing to honor it. Until last week, he and his supporters had taken to (wrongly) calling the agreement unconstitutional. And though the KRG, Iraqiya and Moqtada al-Sadr have been calling for the Erbil Agreement to be fully implemented since summer 2011, it took last month for State of Law to finally discover that themselves loved the Erbil Agreement. Needless to say, the sudden attraction to the deal is seen as mere lip service especially when Nouri refused to implement it.
In violence Al Rafidayn notes that 1 traffice police officer was shot dead in Mosul as was his driver.  In addition, Alsumaria notes a captain in the Ministry of Interior's intelligence division was shot dead in Falluja today.  AFP adds
 a Baghdad roadside bombing targeting a market claimed 1 life and left 
three more people injured and 1 police colonel was shot dead in   
Baghdad.
This week the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) released "Report on Human Rights in Iraq: 2011."  
 In Wednesday's snapshot we noted the highly superficial section on 
Iraq's LGBTs.  The report does a better job with the issue of the rights
 of Iraqi women.  That section opens with:
UNAMI
 continues to monitor the status and rights of women in Iraq, including 
gender based violence such as so-called 'honour' crimes, trafficking and
 domestic violence.  Due to the security situation, UNAMI is uanble to 
collect first hand data on the situation of women in some parts of Iraq 
outside of the Kurdistan Region.
Grasp
 that.  'Violence is down!!!!'  We hear that stupidity over and over 
from the press.  No, it's not really down.  2006 and 2007 were years of 
ethnic cleansing -- encouraged and (I would say) aided by the US 
government.  Those death figures are huge.  I'm not really sure why the 
years of ethnic cleansing are treated as natural or normal figures with 
which to compare everything to?  Iraq remains violent.  And UNAMI tells 
us that it's so violent that they can't even collect basic data.  
But
 the press moved on, didn't they?  They press that largely mocked, 
ridiculed or ignored war resisters fled Iraq.  There's the US wire 
service AP.  There's the New York Times staff.  There's Jane Arraf. There's the Wall St. Journal
 (led by Sam Dagher).  There's CNN. That's it.  Imagine if that was it 
in 2002 and 2003?  If that were it in those years, only those outlets 
and the others ignored Iraq, it would have been so much more difficult 
to sell the illegal war to the American public (a public with a 
significant amount of resistance even at the start).
Valerie
 Gauriat:  We're in Iraq this month to meet women in Baghdad, Najaf and 
Iraqi Kurdistan who are fighting their own kind of war.  A human rights 
activist, two war widwos and a female soldier to regain the rights Iraqi
 women have lost.  Every month in Women and War we bring you the stories
 of women who are fighting across the world.
And
 Iraqi women have lost so much due to the Iraq War.  They've lost 
husbands and fathers and sons and brothers and uncles and mothers and 
daughters and sisters and aunts.  They've lost friends.  Most of all, 
they've gone from  living in one of the most advanced Middle East 
nation-states for women to a country where they have to regularly fight 
for basic dignities.  And fight they do.  They know what's at stake and 
they know the US government isn't helping them, has never helped them.  
The  US State Dept's Anne C. Richard writes with all the enthusiasm that
 historical ignorance and optimism can provide.  We'll note this from her post today at the State Dept blog about her new job working with Iraqis:
Estimates of the numbers of widows in Iraq range from 750,000 to 1.5 million, or between 2.4 percent and 5 percent of the population -- no one knows for sure as there has not been a recent census. In Iraqi society, women traditionally do not work outside of the home. However, the women at this site emphasized that they needed jobs to provide for their children.
Iraq remains a dangerous place and our visit was not announced in advance but the visit was eye opening and well worth the effort it takes to get out and meet ordinary Iraqis.
Later, I raised the plight of the widows with senior Iraqi officials. They were determined to make progress on housing issues and acknowledged problems with registrations -- although they also expressed concerns about the squatters occupying government land.
We'll
 continue to follow Anne C. Richard's posts.  She's got energy and 
optimism and her ability to either ignore or not learn what came before 
may allow her to pull off some small miracles.  I wish her the best 
because Iraqi women could use a miracle or two.  But the issue of the 
widows, their plight, that's been raised with the Iraqi government for 
years now.  There's been no significant improvement or real plans from 
the government.  At one point they were suggesting that the answer was 
for the widows to remarry.  
The illegal war did not help Iraqi women nor has their government made any real strides on their own to help Iraqi women.  Last month the Interfaith Council for Peace & Justice explained: 
But
 for Iraqi citizens, especially women, the ongoing violence caused by 
the U.S. invasion is not the only consequence that has become part of 
the everyday struggle to rebuild their country. Before the U.S. 
invasion, 75% of Iraqi women had college degrees, and 31% of Iraqi women
 had graduate degrees (compared to 35% of European and U.S. women). Only
 10% of women in Iraq now continue to work in their professions, and 
they have to contend with the thousands of more experience and 
better-educated Iraqi women who fled Iraq at the onset of the war and 
are now returning. However most women stay away from their work, 
schools, and universities due to extreme safety concerns: Since the 
beginning of the war, rates of abductions and kidnappings targeting 
women and girls, most often related to sex trafficking, female suicides 
and honor killings have increased.
It
 was beneficial to the US government's aims to scare the Iraqi people 
into submission.  It would be easier to push through various policies 
and programs on a people too scared to fight back.  So the US backed 
thugs, turned their heads the other way not just to looting but to rape 
and so much more.  And Iraqi women could have thrown in the towel and 
said, "Forget it, my safety is what's most important."  Instead, these 
brave women regularly take to the streets and protest for their rights. 
 Even since Nouri's squad of thugs began beating protesters and 
arresting them and torturing them in custody, Iraqi women refuse to hide
 and refuse to give up on their country or let Iraq be turned into 
something that they're no longer a part of.  The US shut the women out 
of the process from the start.  They had to take to the streets when the
 US was writing their rights out of Iraq's new Constitution (in 2005) 
and they've done   that during the continued violence and during the 
periods of the most violence.  Last month, the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Iraq noted:
The
 rights of women in post war Iraq is clear following reports that they 
are victims of human trafficking to and fro Iraq and even within the 
outskirts of the cities with cases of forced prostitution. Women are 
trafficked from Southern Iraq and transported to the Gulf States by rich
 cartels who promise to marry them and give them a good life only to use
 the as servants and sex workers in their well-managed deals.
Most of the 'unveiled' women in Iraq have had their rights violated. There are groups that are making it hard for this woman to have freedom in and around Iraq and creating an atmosphere where they are intimidated. For instance, Fatwas encourages the crowd to throw rotten eggs and tomatoes to any woman around the streets who passes by without a veil. This has made it hard for the professional Iraqi woman to work or get education unless they wear the hijab.
It has to be noted that Islamic leaders from the Shi'ite and the Sunni have strong condemnation against women in Iraq without the hijab, this means trouble for the rights of women in Iraq. Since the war started, the Iraqi women have been attacked, kidnapped and even intimidated in a way that bars them from participating in any role with the society.
Most of the 'unveiled' women in Iraq have had their rights violated. There are groups that are making it hard for this woman to have freedom in and around Iraq and creating an atmosphere where they are intimidated. For instance, Fatwas encourages the crowd to throw rotten eggs and tomatoes to any woman around the streets who passes by without a veil. This has made it hard for the professional Iraqi woman to work or get education unless they wear the hijab.
It has to be noted that Islamic leaders from the Shi'ite and the Sunni have strong condemnation against women in Iraq without the hijab, this means trouble for the rights of women in Iraq. Since the war started, the Iraqi women have been attacked, kidnapped and even intimidated in a way that bars them from participating in any role with the society.
Again to the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) released "Report on Human Rights in Iraq: 2011" this time for Camp Ashraf:
During
 the reporting period, UNAMI continued monitoring the situation of over 
3,000 residents affiliated with the People's Mujahedin of Iran (PMOI) in
 Camp New Iraq (commonly known as Camp Ashraf) and documented a number 
of measures of which Iraqi authorities aimed at tightening control over 
the Camp and its residents with the ultimate objective of closing it 
down by the end of 2011, as declared in the Council of Ministers' 
decision of 17 June 2008.  
On 8 April, in 
an operation that lasted approximately 7 hours, the Iraqi army moved 
into the Camp and occupied its northern part, comprising some 40 percent
 of its total surface area.  The Iraqi authorities described the 
operation as a law enforcement action to restore privately owned land in
 Ashraf to its legitimate owners.  It resulted in the deaths of 36 and 
injuing of more than 300 residents who protested against, and resisted, 
the operation.  On 13, April, a UNAMI delegation was authorized to visit
 the Camp.  The UNAMI physician counted 28 bodies in a makeshift 
morgue.  The apparent cause of death in most cases was bullets and 
shapnel wounds.  Another 6 residents were confirmed dead among those 
injured who had been rushed to Ba'quba hospital.  Two more died later 
from their injuries.  The Iraqi authorities admitted that their forces 
caused 3 fatalities, which they described as 'accidental'.   
In
 a statement made public on 15 April, the United Nations High 
Commissioner for Human Rights said the Iraqi military were well aware of
 the risks attached to launching an operation like this in Ashraf and 
added: "There is no possible excuse for this number of casualties.  
There must be a full, independent and transparent inquiry, and any 
person found responsible for use of excessive force should be 
prosecuted."  On the same day, UNAMI issued a similar statement 
requesting a thorough investigation through an independent commission.  
During the reporting period, no action was taken by the Government of 
Iraq to establish such an independent commission of inquiry to 
investigate the incident.  The 8 April operation was the second 
occasion, after clashes on 28/29 July 2009, when Iraqi forces appear to 
have used excessive restraint in conformity with international human 
rights law in asserting its legitimate authority over the   camp and its
 residents
After this incident, the Iraqi 
Government reaffirmed the deadline of 31 December 2011 for the residents
 to evacuate Camp Ashraf.  UNAMI continued working closely with the 
Government of Iraq, the diplomatic commmunity, UNHCR and the residents' 
representatives in order to find durable solutions.  In late 2011, 
consultations between UNAMI and the Government of Iraq led to a 
Memorandum of Understanding, which was signed by both parties on 25 
December.  In it, the United Nations offered its services as an 
impartial facilitator and observer in a process that would see the 
residents of Camp Ashraf move to a temporary transit location at Camp 
Liberty (a former US military base near Baghdad International Airport), 
undergo individual refugee status determination by UNHCR, and eventually
 either their voluntary return to their countries of nationality or if 
eligible, resettlement in third countries, subject to the availablility 
of   receiving countries. In an open letter of 28 December 2011 to the 
residents of Camp Ashraf, UNAMI SRSG, Martin Kobler, affirmed that the 
United Nations desired to "prevent violence and confrontation" a 
permanent solution for the residents.  He pledged that UN staff would 
monitor the situation at Camp Liberty 24/7 until the last resident had 
left Iraq.  
By 31 December, the Prime 
Minister Al-Maliki announced the extension of the deadline for the 
departure from Iraq of Ashraf residents till the end of April 2012.  At 
time of publishing this report 29 May 2012, 1996 residents have 
relocated from Camp Ashraf to Camp Liberty (Camp Hurriya).  
UNAMI
 reminds the Government of Iraq to abide by its legal obligations, 
reaffirmed in the Memorandum of Understanding, to fully respect its 
human rights obligations under international law in dealing with the 
residents of Camp Ashraf.  It also calls upon the residents and their 
representatives to obey the laws of Iraq, and to voluntarily participate
 in the process offered by the UN and agreed to by the Government of 
Iraq aimed at resolving the issue peacefully. 
Which takes us into legal news, it's a shock to the administration but most others saw the ruling coming.  Jamie Crawford (CNN) reports,
 "A federal appeals court has ordered Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
 to make a prompt decision on whether to remove an Iranian dissident 
group from the State Department's list of foreign terrorist 
organizations."  This was a unanimous decision handed down by the US 
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.  Why was it 
unanimous?  Because the administration has been in violation for some 
time now.  James Vicini (Reuters) reminds,
 "The appeals court ruled nearly two years ago that   Clinton had 
violated the group's rights and instructed her to 'review and rebut' 
unclassified parts of the record she initially relied on and say if she 
regards the sources as sufficiently credible.  It said Clinton had yet 
to make a final decision."  The administration was in contempt.  The 
courts and the executive branch were in conflict.  (They still are.)  
What generally happens there is the court of appeals makes a united 
front because this is now a court issue (as opposed to the merits of the
 case from when it was heard earlier).  Unlike the executive branch, the
 judicial branch has no security forces.  So they want to send a message
 but they also want to do so without looking weak if the administration 
ignores them.  So since two months was the target date for the State 
Dept to finish a review on the MEK, they gave State four months which, 
they hope, is more than enough time. However, the two months (as the   
judges know) was a guideline, not a promise.  State made very clear 
before the court that they were not promising two months.  So it could 
go on past four months.  Four months carries them into October.  If 
they're not complying by then, there's a good chance they won't.  
Whether Barack Obama wins a second term as US President or not, Hillary 
Clinton has already stated she was only doing one term as Secretary of 
State.  So when November arrives, if there's no decision, there won't be
 a rush for one.  If Barack wins re-election, he'll state that he has to
 find someone to oversee the department first.  If Barack loses, they've
 already blown off the appeals court for over two years now, continuing 
to blow them off for sixty more days will be a breeze.
There
 should be outrage over this but faux activists like you know who only 
pretend to give a damn about the rule of law.  The administration has 
refused to comply with a court order.  If it were on any other topic, 
you could expect yet another shrill column; however, he doens't like the
 MEK so rule of law gets tossed out the window.  
Turning
 to veterans issues,  yesterday we noted the Dept of Labor is holding a 
Veterans Hiring Fair next week on Wednesday, June 6th.  It will be at 
the Great Hall of the Frances Perkins US Dept of Labor Building on 200 
Constitution Ave. starting at ten in the morning and ending at one in 
the afternoon.  You will need veteran i.d. to enter the job fair.  And 
it is open to all adult veterans.   Repeating, that's next week on 
Wednesday.   Tara Merrigan (Austin American-Statesman) reports, "Austin will honor Iraq War veterans in a July 7 parade and job fair, city leaders announced Thursday." 
Michael
 Oros:  I would suggest that the very broad definition of "prosethetics"
 can lead to confusion and, worse, application of policies that are 
inappropriate to replacement limbs and orthotics.  The result: 
inappropriate barriers to care for veterans with limb loss who need 
timely access to high quality prosthetics in order to go to work, care 
for their families, and live their everyday lives.  In fact, the Health 
Subcommittee saw that confusion on display in its hearing in this very 
room only two weeks ago.  Chairwoman Buerkle held a hearing on 
"Optimmizing Care for Veterans with Prosthetics" on May 16th.  During 
the hearing, she clarified multiple times that the topic of the hearing 
was prosthetics as traditionally understood and defined.  During that 
hearing, the VA's Chief Procurement and Logistics Officer told the 
Subcommittee that because changes in procurement policies applied only 
to items that cost   $3,000 or more, those charges would not apply to 
97% of the prosthetics budget. I'm sure that statement 
is accurate for everything included in the billion-dollar-plus line item
 described by the VA as "prosthetics." However, for the approximately 
$58 million portion of that line item spent on replacement limbs and 
orthoses, that statement is confusing and unhelpful.  Virtually every 
part of even a fairly low-tech prosthetic limb costs more than $3,000.  
So adopting procurement policies with the understanding that the policy 
does not apply to 97% of prosthetic purchases can lead to decisions that
 delay specialized and vitally needed care for veterans with limb loss 
or limb impairment.  The veterans we see have already sacrificed 
enough.  They are working hard to put their personal, family and 
professional lives back together.  This task should not be made more 
difficult by the application of overly broad   policies that do not take
 into consideration the very specialized and unique nature of 
prosthetics and orthotics.
Buerkle is
 US House Rep Ann Marie Buerkle who chairs the House Veterans Affairs 
Subcommittee on Health.  The hearing he's referring to was May 16th (we 
covered it in the May 16th, May 17th and May 18th
 snapshots).  Oros was speaking at Wednesday's House Veterans Affairs 
Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations hearing on VA's purchasing 
of prosthetics.  The Subcommittee Chair is Bill Johnson and US House Rep
 Joe Donnelly is the Ranking Member.  There were three panels.  The 
first was made up by the American Orthotic & Prosthetic 
Association's Michael Oros (quoted above) and Academy Medical LLC's   
Daniel Shaw.  The second panel was DoD's Charles Scoville who is the 
Chief of Amputee Patient Care Service at Walter Reed and rom the VA's 
Office of Inspector General's Linda Halliday (accompanied by Nick Dahl 
and Kent Wrathall).   The third panel was VA's Philip Matkovsky 
(accompanied by Dr. Lucille Beck, Norbert Doyle and C. Ford Heard).  
Chair Bill Johnson noted the VA's defintion of prosthetics at the start of the hearing:
All
 aids, devices, parts or accessories which patients require to replace, 
support, or substitute for impaired or missing anatomical parts of the 
body.  The items include artifical limbs, terminal devices, stump socks,
 braces, hearing aids and batteries, cosmetic facial or body 
restorations, optical devices, manual or motorized wheelchairs, 
orthopedic shoes, and similar items.
Now let's go back to one segment of  Michael Oros' testimony from earlier. 
In
 fact, the Health Subcommittee saw that confusion on display in its 
hearing in this very room only two weeks ago. Chairwoman Buerkle held a 
hearing on "Optimmizing Care for Veterans with Prosthetics" on May 16th.
 During the hearing, she clarified multiple times that the topic of the 
hearing was prosthetics as traditionally understood and defined. During 
that hearing, the VA's Chief Procurement and Logistics Officer told the 
Subcommittee that because changes in procurement policies applied only 
to items that cost $3,000 or more, those charges would not apply to 97% 
of the prosthetics budget. I'm sure that statement is accurate for 
everything included in the billion-dollar-plus line item described by 
the VA as "prosthetics." However, for the approximately $58 million 
portion of that line item spent on replacement limbs and orthoses, that 
statement is confusing and unhelpful. Virtually every part of even a 
fairly low-tech prosthetic limb   costs more than $3,000. So adopting 
procurement policies with the understanding that the policy does not 
apply to 97% of prosthetic purchases can lead to decisions that delay 
specialized and vitally needed care for veterans with limb loss or limb 
impairment. 
The person Oros was referring to is Norbert Doyle.  He avoided speaking on Wednesday, instead 
Chair
 Bill Johnson:  You note the VA's new policy for purchases over $3,000. 
 Approximately 5% of biologics cost more than $3,000 so your policy will
 have minimal bearing on 95% of biologics purchased.  Can you describe 
how your policy will effect the other 95% of biologics purchased?  
Philip
 Matovsky: Uhm.  Well I don't actually have the specific cost break out 
for the biologics themselves.  But the, uh, three thousand dollar 
threshold was noted that it was 97% of the cost would be below $3,000.  
Actually the number is a little bit north of 50, 55% of all of the 
prosthetic purchases are greater than $3,000 in cost. It's the number of
 transactions is the 3% number.  In terms of the biologics themselves, 
uhm, our expectation is that we're asking in this policy moving forward 
that we document, uh, that a waiver from FSS was requested and that part
 of what we hope to achieve from this and that we expect to achieve from
 this is that we'll collect information about why FSS is actually not 
being selected as the source for biologics or for other items or 
national contracts for that matter.  And be able to attenuate 
practice through education,communication in the field as well.
Why
 is that VA can't use terms accurately?  In the hearing on Wednesday, it
 was about definitions.  The conflict in what the Subcommittees were 
told has to do with VA using a figure and then saying, "Wait, wait, we 
testified about this 97% on $3,000 orders and you thought we meant cost,
 we meant number of orders!"  Why is it so damn difficult for the VA 
officials to speak in a straight forward manner?  (And remember that 
they try to dismiss the IG's report by claiming the IG is using one set 
of terms while they're using another.)  VA needs to get with the rest of
 the government.  The prosthetic issue, for example.  VA ges its own 
definition?  It doesn't match with the Defense Dept's definition.  Why 
is so hard for the VA to utilize the same terms and same definitions as 
the rest of the executive branch?  That really needs to be addressed.
If you doubt it, this confusion never stops.  In his opening remarks, Chair Bill Johnson touched on this:
Among
 my follow-up questions was a request for a copy of the VA's guidance in
 how it would ensure purchasing agents followed the VAAR [VA Acquisition
 Regulations].  Just yesterday, a response to that and the other 
questions was provided.  It is interesting that only now is the VA 
working to ensure that purchasers using Section 8123 are documented and 
in line with the FAR and VAAR.  After all, the VA has had nearly three 
decades to work on this.  Failing to document purchases under 8123, as 
acknowledged in the answers I received yesterday, is a reckless use of 
taxpayer dollars.  To us on this Committee, it appears as though the VA 
operates as it sees fit until attention is called to its operation. 
The
 VA was worthless in terms of witnesses.  Matkovsky wanted everyone to 
know that purchases under Section 8123 in the future would be 
auditable.  Johnson's question was can they go back and audit past 
purchases under that number.  In a long meandering answer about 'from 
this point forward,' Matkovsky implies that they've never been able to 
audit Section 8123 purchases in thae past.  That would be over 30 years 
worth of purchases.  Is the VA not able to speak English?  
Something
 as simple as Chair Johnson attempting to find about the hows and whens 
of the definition VA is using for prosthetic and when it was last 
updated required a song and dance until Matkovsky finally passed off to 
Dr. Beck who had to flip through a manual to find out (2001 was the 
answer for when it was last updated).  But after finally providing an 
answer, all the sudden it's there's-an-internal-review-going-on-now 
(with many more words than that).  I would assume if you're part of an 
update review, you would know what you were updating especially if the 
manual hadn't been updated in over a decade.
VA
 officials can't answer a straight question.  So we'll drop back to 
earlier in the hearing to wrap up our coverage of it here.  Excerpt.
Chair
 Bill Johnson: And maybe you've already answered this in some of your 
comments but, if you were going to design a system, Mr. Oros, for the VA
 to evaluate the quality of care provided to veterans, what would you 
do? What provisions would you put in that system to improve the quality 
of care that veterans receive?
Michael
 Oros: I would start to look at implementation of some functional 
outcome measurements at the time of the original prescription and then 
follow it throughout that veteran's care so that you see that there has 
been restoration of function.  And that can be done with validated 
instruments and there's also technology available that can support that 
kind of measurements.  
Chair
 Bill Johnson:  Okay.  As one of the elements of quality you describe 
the need to educate veterans about their right to choose a provider of 
prosthetic care the Committee is starting to hear more and more stories 
about veterans who say that the VA is creating barriers to their 
selection of non-VA care.  What has been your experience?  Have you 
heard from veterans that this is a growing problem?  
Michael
 Oros: I've seen it locally.  I think that's what I could probably speak
 most directly to is locally we no longer have access -- it's been at 
least two years that our company, while we've had a VA contract, has not
 been invited to that amputee clinic that I referred to previously -- 
where really, those referals are -- and the veterans ability to 
communicate with a prosthetist as well as the referring VA physician are
 kind of present in the same building.  
Chair
 Bill Johnson:  Here's that word again, from your point of view what 
barriers are preventing veterans from selecting a prosthetist of their 
own choice? Is it just that veterans don't know their rights?
Michael Oros: I think its their unfamiliarity with their rights.  
Chair
 Bill Johnson:  Okay. You talked in your written testimony specifically 
about older veterans at your practice complaining that there appears to 
be new administrative hurdles to prevent their continuing to receive 
care in non-VA facilities.  Can you give us some examples? 
Michael
 Oros:  We've seen in our own facility where veterans who received care 
from our company for a number of years -- and actually I've heard 
similar stories from other providers too -- where they've gone back to 
the VA for other services, prescriptions, etc. and the patient has been 
-- I'll use the word "discovered" to be an amputee and they've been 
directed to receive their care within the VA system versus, again, that 
outside provider.  
Yesterday's snapshot
 covered the House Veterans Affairs Committee hearing on the Vow to Hire
 Heroes Act and efforts at raising awareness on the program.  We'll 
close with the news release the Committee issued after the hearing:
WASHINGTON,
 D.C. —Today, the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs held an oversight
 hearing entitled "Reviewing the Implementation of Major Provisions of 
the VOW to Hire Heroes Act of 2011." The VOW to Hire Heroes Act of 2011
 is the signature veterans' legislation of the 112th Congress. Officials
 from the departments of Labor (DoL) and Veterans Affairs (VA) testified
 on the implementation of the law to date.
The Veterans Retraining Assistance Program (VRAP)
 was the main focus of the hearing. The cornerstone of the VOW to Hire 
Heroes Act, VRAP will provide up to one-year of Montgomery GI Bill 
benefits to unemployed veterans, ages 35-60, for in-demand jobs and 
careers. The Committee applauded efforts by the departments at the 
program staff-level, but cautioned that more needed to be done to 
promote VRAP.
"I am pleased to see that 
over 11,000 applications have been received so far, meaning that we are 
well on our way to filling all of the 45,000 slots paid for in the VOW 
Act for the remainder of this fiscal year," stated Rep. Jeff Miller, 
Chairman of the House Committee on Veterans' Affairs. "But I am 
concerned that not enough is being done by either department, or the 
President himself, to promote this benefit. Getting the message out 
about this opportunity is critically important to putting unemployed 
veterans on a path to a job in a high-demand field."
In
 addition, Committee Members also expressed concern that DoL and VA were
 not taking the appropriate steps to ensure that veterans were aware 
VRAP existed. Allison Hickey, Under Secretary for Benefits at VA, noted 
some of the challenges facing the two departments to effectively reach 
out to veterans about VRAP were that "a centralized system to identify 
eligible veterans does not exist."
Few 
Members had seen any outreach in their local communities, leading the 
Committee to ask if a plan was in place to reach unemployed veterans in 
non-metropolitan areas, specifically through TV advertising.
"Despite
 having had ample time to come forth with one, VA has failed to deliver 
an advertising budget," Miller said. "Advertising is a quick, effective 
way to control the message in order to reach a large number of veterans 
in a very short period of time. That is the level of promotion for VRAP 
that our unemployed veterans deserve. We cannot afford to let even one 
training slot go unfilled. I encourage all eligible veterans to sign up 
for this opportunity at their local one stop career center or online."
 
